Milad Tower
Template:Short description Template:Infobox building
The Milad Tower (Template:Langx, Template:Transliteration) (lit. Birth Tower), also known as the Tehran Tower ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Template:Transliteration),<ref name="emporis">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> is a multi-purpose tower in Tehran, Iran. It is the sixth-tallest tower<ref name="NBN Nasl Bartar Novin">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and the world's first telecommunication tower in terms of the usage area of the top structure and the tallest tower in Iran and the 24th-tallest freestanding structure in the world.<ref>Andrew Burke, Mark Elliott. Iran (Lonely Planet Country Guide). p. 114. Lonely Planet Publications, 5th Edition, 2008. Template:ISBN.</ref> The construction of this tower took about 11 years and 7 months.
It is located between Shahrak-e Gharb and the district of Gisha, standing at 435 meters from the base to the tip of the antenna.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The head consists of a large pod with 12 floors, the roof of which is at 315 meters.
The tower is a part of the International Trade and Convention Center of Tehran, which also includes a five-star hotel, a convention center, a world trade center and an IT park.<ref name="skyscraper"/><ref name="iitk"/><ref name="emporis"/><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
HistoryEdit
BackgroundEdit
The Milad Tower was part of the Shahestan Pahlavi project, a vast development for a new government and commercial centre for Tehran, that was designed in the 1970s but never materialised, except for the tower. After an international competition, the project was awarded to the Llewelyn Davies Company and construction was inaugurated on 19 August 1975, with Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and Mayor of Tehran, Gholamreza Nikpey burying a commemorative gold plaque.<ref>Shahestan Pahlavi. Book 1: The Master Plan. Llewely Davies, 1976</ref> There is also another background of building this tower, since the construction of the tower was started after the 1979 revolution. The new government of Iran wanted to create a new symbol for Tehran to replace the Azadi Tower that was a symbol of the Pahlavi era.
ConstructionEdit
Template:See also The construction of the tower was commenced in 1997. In 2001, at the suggestion of the Islamic Council of Tehran, on the occasion of the 100th birthday of Ruhollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic of Iran, it was renamed Milad Tower. The construction of this tower lasted for 11 years. In the first 8 years, only 40% of the tower was completed, but with the acceleration of the project by Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the mayor of Tehran, the next 60% was built in 30 months. Upon completion of its construction in the mid 2000s, the Milad Tower was considered the fourth-tallest freestanding telecommunication tower in the world.<ref name="emporis"/> The tower's construction was finished in 2007, 11 years after the beginning of construction. On 7 October 2008, Milad Tower was opened with the slogan "Heaven is near" in the presence of representatives of the Islamic Council, members of the Islamic Council of Tehran and Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the mayor of Tehran. This ceremony was covered by more than 250 Iranian and foreign journalists. Numerous conflicts on the history of the tower still prevail, partly because sections of the tower were open to visitors once the elevators started operating during construction and the tower was still far from finished.<ref name="skyscraper"/><ref name="iitk"/><ref name="emporis"/>
The design of the project was headed by Iranian architect Mohammad Reza Hafezi. The general contractor was the company of Boland Payeh, and the main client and investor was the company of Yadman Sazeh, a representative of the Municipality of Tehran.<ref name="iitk"/>
Structure and featuresEdit
Milad Tower is Template:Convert tall and is the tallest tower in Iran, and the sixth-tallest telecommunication tower in the world. It consists of five main parts, including the foundation, transition (lobby) structure, shaft, head structure and the antenna mast.
The lobby structure consists of six floors. The first three floors consist of 63 trade units, 11 food courts, a cafeteria, and a commercial products exhibition which is supposed to be about Template:Convert.<ref name="emporis"/> The first and second underground floors consist of installing sections and a data center. The ground floor is dedicated to the entrance and the gatehouse.
The shaft is a concrete structure about Template:Convert high from the ground floor. Six elevators in three different sides of the shaft are used to transfer the visitors to the head of the tower at the speed of Template:Convert, besides an emergency staircase at the fourth side.
The head of the tower is a steel structure weighing about 25,000 tonnes and consisting of 12 floors. The top floors of the tower include a public art gallery, a cafeteria, a revolving restaurant, a VIP restaurant, telecommunication floors, mechanical floors, fire-immune areas built as a refuge zone,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}Template:Dead link</ref> a closed observation deck, an open observation deck, and a sky dome.<ref name="iitk"/>
The four-stage antenna mast is about Template:Convert high. The lower floor of the mast is for the adjustment of public users' telecommunication antennas, and the three upper floors are dedicated to the antenna of the Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting.<ref name="iitk"/><ref name="emporis"/>
The complex also features a parking area of about Template:Convert, a large computer and telecommunications unit, a cultural and scientific unit, a commercial transaction center, a temporary showroom for exhibiting products, a specialized library, an exhibition hall, and an administrative unit.
The Milad Tower has an octagonal base, a reference to traditional Iranian architecture.<ref name="iitk"/>
GalleryEdit
- Tochal and Milad Tower from Chitgar Park.jpg
Mount Tochal and the Milad Tower
- Milad tower2023.jpg
View of Tehran at night from Milad Tower
- Milad Tower - panoramio (1).jpg
Milad Tower at night
- Tour Milad, nuit, Téhéran (1).jpg
Milad Tower at night
- Tour Milad, Téhéran (1).jpg
Milad Tower and a portrait of Ali Khamenei
- Tour Milad, Téhéran (2).jpg
Milad Tower from below
RanksEdit
See alsoEdit
- Fernsehturm Stuttgart – prototype (first TV tower built from concrete)
- List of revolving restaurants
- List of tallest buildings in Tehran
- International rankings of Iran
Similar TowersEdit
The Kuala Lumpur Tower in Malaysia bears a striking resemblance to the Milad Tower.
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
Template:Supertall Template:Tehran Province Template:Towers in Iran